At least some X570 motherboards will still support AMD Ryzen 5 1600 AF CPUs

AMD’s Ryzen 5 1600 AF CPU is a strange one. Although it bears the ‘1600’ name, it’s not the same chip at all, and is in fact faster than the original Ryzen 5 1600. Because of this, it has remained a popular budget option in lieu of purchasing one of the best gaming CPUs. And now it looks like its motherboard compatibility will extend into at least some of the X570 range.

Gigabyte Japan (via Tom’s Hardware) tweeted that, regarding the Ryzen 5 1600 AF and X570 motherboards, we can be “assured that our AM4 motherboard supports it properly” (text translated from Twitter). For those who know the background of the 1600 AF, this probably won’t come as a surprise, but naming conventions don’t make things easy for us.

The Ryzen 5 1600 AF, for those who aren’t aware, is made using the 12nm process of Zen+ rather than the 14nm process of Zen. In many ways this makes that 1600 AF more of a ‘Ryzen 5 2600 lite’ than a Ryzen 5 1600, which is why Gigabyte says it will run on its X570 boards.

We recently discovered that only X570 and B550 chipsets will support 4th Gen Ryzen CPUs. Many have questioned why this is the case when these boards are still using the AM4 socket, but it doesn’t all come down to the socket. Motherboard ROM needs to be adequate for the new firmware, and it doesn’t seem like AMD can guarantee this will be the case for anything other than the latest X570 and B550 boards.

But while AMD’s chipsets’ forwards compatibility has had a bit of a hiccup, its chipsets’ backwards compatibility still seems to be in good standing given the Ryzen 1600 AF can be plugged into some of these latest motherboards (or, at the very least, the X570 boards from Gigabyte). It’s somewhat misleading, though, since this doesn’t mean that X570 board compatibility extends back to original Zen CPUs, as the AF version isn’t original Zen.

When it comes to the processor in question, the Ryzen 1600 AF is an incredibly popular budget gaming CPU, and for good reason. It’s cheap as chips and markedly better than the original Ryzen 5 1600. The problem is, now that AMD’s Ryzen 3 3300X is out, it’s difficult to say what will happen to the 1600 AF. The 3300X will almost certainly run most games better even though it has fewer cores (all games except those that are really good at multithreading), and the newer Zen 2 architecture is an alluring offer in place of the 1600 AF’s mish-mash of Zen and Zen+ technology. It’s looking like it will cost more, though, if only a little.

But many Ryzen 5 1600 AF’s will already be sitting in people’s rigs, and for those people, this extra stretch of perhaps unexpected longevity will be welcomed.

Get involved in the conversation by heading over to our Facebook and Instagram pages. To stay up to date with the latest PC gaming guides, news, and reviews, follow PCGamesN on Twitter.